25 y/o. Migrated from Reddit.

Imma post all kinds of stuff. Gay, trans, straight, vanilla, kinky, human, furry, monster, hentai, renders… but no underage.

If you don’t like it, keep scrolling. If you do like it, leave a comment or send a dm so I know what kind of stuff to post more of.

  • 210 Posts
  • 25 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • thanks for checking! yeah idk what’s happening on my end. I get audio from other user’s posts on this community, but not yours. Weird bug.

    I’ve tried the catbox download, voyager player for lemmynsfw, chrome iOS, safari iOS, with and without VPN. I’ll have to try a non-mobile OS next.

    Update. Works great on desktop (win11). Works great on VLC for ios. Likely an iOS browser bug. It might be encoding related? ಥ_ಥ




  • Although Sanger rejected racist bigotry…

    Gotta take a break from my regularly scheduled porn posting to add a note to that.

    Even in her most eugenics book, The Pivot of Civilization, Sanger did not tie fitness for reproduction to any particular ethnic group. It appears that Sanger was motivated by a genuine concern to improve the health of poor mothers she served rather than a desire to eliminate their stock. Danger believed that all their affiliations arose from their unrestrained fertility, not their genes or racial heritage. For this reason, I agree that Sanger’s reviews were distinct from those of her eugenecist colleagues. Sanger nevertheless promoted two of the most perverse tenets of eugenic thinking: that social problems are caused by reproduction of the socially disadvantaged and that their childbearing should therefore be deferred. In a society marked by racial hierarchy, these principles inevitably produced policies designed to reduce Black women’s fertility. The judgement of who is fit and who is unfit, of who should reproduce and who should not, incorporated the racist ideologies of the time. (p. 81, emphasis added).

    Roberts, D. (1997/2017). The Dark Side of Birth Control. In Killing the Black Body (pp. 59-103; twentieth anniversary ed.). Vintage Books.